Action on terminal groins

This week the NC Coastal Resources Commission will make a recommendation on hardened sea structures to the NC General Assembly. The NC Sierra Club is urging the commission to uphold the states historic ban on terminal groins and other hardened structures. Proposed legislation would create an exception and allow terminal groins to be built in order to protect beach front property. Unfortunately, the construction of these terminal groins will accelerate the erosion of public beaches further down shore. While eroding public access beaches, the groins will also destroy habitats for sea turtles and migratory birds. Especially the piping plover, an endangered species which has a number of designated critical habitats along our coast.

The policy shift could also encourage residential and commercial development on highly unstable inlets. If you combine this development with the CRC's report detailing that NC sea levels could rise 1 meter by 2100, it's easy to conclude that the environmental and fiscal risk could be detrimental to the public. A third party study, conducted at the direction of the legislature, also failed to provide any evidence to overturn the ban.

This historic ban has long kept our coastline natural and protected our beaches for public use, changing course now due to political pressure is not the answer. We find it critical that the CRC uphold this ban in order to protect our coast for years to come.

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This is a big deal. I see

This is a big deal. I see more litigation in the future, whichever way it goes.

I will make an effort to

I will make an effort to contact my state legislators regarding this, though both being head in the sand Republicans the chances of them siding with the environment and the general public are remote at best. Thanks for the heads up.

I'm a moderate Democrat.

Unfortunately, the developers

have convinced many (who should know better) that protecting targeted areas of the coast is both harmless to other areas and vital to the overall economic health of coastal tourism and growth.

In the absence of strong and broad opposition to this, I fear the General Assembly will sit back and let it happen.